Ninite helps us patch 3rd party applications. Complements CM's Windows and MS Office patching.
See also
Ninite's web site:
- https://ninite.com/ (this page lists software covered by the non-Pro version)
They have a page explaining what you get with the paid "Pro" version, and another page listing the software they cover:
- https://ninite.com/pro
- https://ninite.com/applist/pro.html - a larger number then more non-Pro
Once you log in with a Pro account credentials, you access their easy-to-use and understand console.
- With the console, one can install, uninstall, reinstall apps across all machines or individual machines.
- Actions work for off-campus machines which CM can’t support.
Preface
Both CM and Ninite can patch select applications which already exist on a computer, however they got installed. The table below lists some ways they differ operationally.
- By "CM", we are also meaning the use of WSUS in CM to pull in packaged updates coming from Flexera for systems put into "managed systems" groups.
Pricing
- ~$720/yr for 100. ~$1,300/yr for 200 systems.
- 3/29/2018: Our Technical Risk Assessment (TRA) for Ninite Pro was approved by Tom Horton, ITSO (required by Cornell Purchasing).
Criteria | Ninite | CM | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Number of apps patched, if already exist on system | Many, many apps patched. Including 100% of the ones CM currently patches. | Firefox, Flash, iTunes, Java, and Chrome patched. Others? See right => | Where does Cornell document CM's currently patched 3rd party apps? Process to add? All packaged by Flexera? |
Capacity to install or uninstall a covered app | See above: Many app. Trivial to do per-machine, ad hoc adds and removes via web interface. It's actually fun! | See above: Limited number. Not easy to add or remove in an ad hoc manner, much less per machine. | |
Timely availability | Immediately available, and we control directly | Sometimes protracted delayed availability. And then staged deployed over 1.5 weeks via first a test group, and then on to all "managed" systems. | What gates initial availability from CIT's Managed Desktop (MD) group? (Why would there be much of a Cornell-side availability delay, especially as compared to Ninite? |
Visibility of outcomes, and ease of ad hoc review | Clear, fast web-based view by authorized IT staff. | CM has report capabilities so if crafted to meet needs, swell. Less so for ad hoc query interests. Flexera reporting back is NOT visible to TSPs, right? | What value might Flexera's reports have to us TSPs managing systems? |
Infrastructure requirements | None | AD and CM. AND must be in a group accepting all Windows/ Office updates. | RESEARCH-specific: For sensitive or research machines, CIT's updates and methods are often not appropriate. |
Reliability | Pending. Presumed good. | Data points: Firefox will often install 32-bit version on systems with a 64-bit installed(?!). Firefox will sometimes "update" to an OLDER version(?!). | |
Use of campus | Yes | No | If off campus AND use VPN, then CM may work. |
Use on campus 10-space areas | Pending. Updating works if use proxy storage (have not yet tried this). And initial call-in of a client must be on full-space to tie client to our collection. (Subsequent communications through proxy storage?) ITSO added all-but-one of the Ninite-related domains and we must now confirm sufficient. | Yes. | RESEARCH-specific concern. |
Data point
From: Michael E Hint
Sent: Monday, March 26, 2018 4:35 PM
Subject: Ninite Pro success - Firefox ESR 52.7.3
Thought I’d pass along that Firefox ESR 52.7.3 was released today. I was able to push it to 30 or so machines immediately in seconds, and the rest should get it when people close out of Firefox. A Ninite Pro success story.
Michael